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Health Education Research Advance Access published online on August 4, 2009

Health Education Research, doi:10.1093/her/cyp042
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Dose relations between goal setting, theory-based correlates of goal setting and increases in physical activity during a workplace trial

Rod K. Dishman1,*, Robert J. Vandenberg2, Robert W. Motl3, Mark G. Wilson4 and David M. DeJoy4

1 Department of Kinesiology, Ramsey Student Center
2 Department of Management, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA
3 Department of Kinesiology, University of Illinois
4 Department of Health Promotion and Behavior, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA

Correspondence to: * Correspondence to: R. K. Dishman, Department of Kinesiology, Ramsey Student Center, The University of Georgia, 330 River Road, Athens, GA 30602-6554, USA. E-mail: rdishman{at}uga.edu.

The effectiveness of an intervention depends on its dose and on moderators of dose, which usually are not studied. The purpose of the study is to determine whether goal setting and theory-based moderators of goal setting had dose relations with increases in goal-related physical activity during a successful workplace intervention. A group-randomized 12-week intervention that included personal goal setting was implemented in fall 2005, with a multiracial/ethnic sample of employees at 16 geographically diverse worksites. Here, we examined dose-related variables in the cohort of participants (N = 664) from the 8 worksites randomized to the intervention. Participants in the intervention exceeded 9000 daily pedometer steps and 300 weekly minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) during the last 6 weeks of the study, which approximated or exceeded current public health guidelines. Linear growth modeling indicated that participants who set higher goals and sustained higher levels of self-efficacy, commitment and intention about attaining their goals had greater increases in pedometer steps and MVPA. The relation between change in participants’ satisfaction with current physical activity and increases in physical activity was mediated by increases in self-set goals. The results show a dose relation of increased physical activity with changes in goal setting, satisfaction, self-efficacy, commitment and intention, consistent with goal-setting theory.

Received on November 11, 2008; accepted on July 9, 2009


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